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View all search resultsTech giants love to portray themselves as forces for good and as the United States was gripped by anti-racism protests a number of them publicly disavowed selling controversial facial recognition technology to police forces.
In a recent interview with The Jakarta Post, Qlue founder and president director Rama Raditya said Qlue had expanded to 25 cities across Indonesia and used artificial intelligence (AI) and the internet-of-things (IoT) in most of its products.
Ahead of election day on Feb. 15, the Elections Supervisory Agency (Bawaslu) will enable the public to join in the monitoring of polling stations through a mobile phone application, which Bawaslu officials will record and then upload.
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